The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 26, 2001, Page 7, Image 7

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    Lost O'Keeffe work displayed at college
rHE ASsnniATFn doecc
urhirh Ahhv Prirl-cfollor HnnotoH
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. —
Georgia O'Keeffe’s bold land
scapes and paintings of animal
3ones identify her so strongly
tfith New Mexico that her ado
escent years in Virginia tend to
;et overlooked.
Also largely forgotten is a
1938 exhibition - her first solo
show in the South - at the
College of William and Mary,
where the artist returned to
iccept her first honorary degree.
The university re-creates
that "lost” exhibition with
‘Georgia O’Keeffe in
nVilliamsburg: A Re-Creation of
the Artist's First Public
Exhibition in the South.” The
show opens Saturday at the col
lege’s Muscarelle Museum of
The show also will include
recently discovered O'Keeffe let
ters, other historical documents
ind a 6-and-a-half-minute
lome movie, never before
/iewed publicly, showing
3'Keeffe on campus to receive
the degree.
"To be able to add some
thing to the biography of an
\merican icon, I think, is signif
icant,” said Bonnie G. Kelm,
director of the Muscarelle and
associate professor of art and art
listory.
The original exhibition was
important because O’Keeffe and
tier husband, art dealer and
photographer Alfred Stieglitz,
selected eight paintings repre
senting her work during the pre
idous 10 years, when O'Keeffe
reached maturity and fame,
SCelmsaid.
"I am glad that you will have
the paintings to speak for me,”
D’Keeffe wrote in a letter to
then-college President John
Stewart Bryan. The artist dis
iiked public speaking and did
not make a speech during the
graduation ceremony.
The ninth painting in the
show was 1932’s “White Flower,”
to the school in honor of
O'Keeffe’s degree.
The Rockefeller family was
restoring Colonial Williamsburg
at the time.
The show was never
reviewed, likely because it lasted
just six days.
Only a picture of O'Keeffe in
her cap and gown appeared in
The New York Times. Re-creat
ing the show is an opportunity
to document it properly, Kelm
said.
The works - flower paint
ings, a view of New York City,
southwestern landscapes and a
bone painting - include some
real gems, said Lynn Marsden
Atlass, curator of American and
contemporary art at the
Chrysler Museum of Art in
Norfolk.
“What you’ve got is a small
exhibition but a beautiful cross
section of the work she was
doing the time,” Marsden-Atlass
said. “Each piece is in and of
itself exquisitely beautiful.’’
Officials hit upon re-creat
ing the 1938 exhibition when
Ann C. Madonia, curator of col
lections, did some research in
the university’s Swem Library
archives.
That exhibition was briefly
mentioned in some O’Keeffe
biographies, but there was no
information about what was in
it, how long it was or who organ
ized it
Madonia was able to fill in
some gaps when she uncovered
correspondence between
O'Keeffe and Bryan, and letters
from Leslie Cheek Jr., chairman
of the art department, to
O’Keeffe and Stieglitz.
Madonia also found a hand
written inventory of the paint
ings that had been in the 1938
show. Barbara Buhler Lynes,
director of the Georgia O’Keeffe
Research Institute and curator
of collections at the Georgia
O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe,
N.M., identified the handwrit
' 'It will be lovely to see the Williamsburg
country again with the spring leaves. I must
assure you that / never even imagined ever
going there or any other place for an honorary
degree. It is quite outside my usual way of
thinking so it is very much a surprise to me. A
pleasant surprise. ”
Georgia O’Keeffe
In a letter to her former college William and Mary
mg as that of Stieglitz.
Lynes helped the Muscarelle
identify and track down the
eight paintings, seven of which
have been borrowed from pri
vate collectors and other muse
ums for the re-created exhibi
tion. One painting, "Yellow
Hickory Leaves With Daisy,” will
be represented by a photo
because it is too fragile to travel.
For the re-creation, the walls
in the display area will be paint
ed bluish white and trimmed in
silver gray, as O'Keeffe had spec
ified, according to a news
release written at die time.
Kelm and Madonia say they
hope the exhibition will dispel
myths concerning O’Keeffe,
including the notion that she
supposedly was aloof and did
not care about thie degree. The
home movie, which Lynes
obtained from the O’Keeffe fam
ily, shows a smiling, waving
O’Keeffe.
“Later on, everyone remem
bers her being very severe, but
this is very obviously a joyous
occasion,” Madonia says.
O’Keeffe's family moved to
Williamsburg from Sun Prairie,
Wis., in 1902, when her father
read promotional literature
claiming that Williamsburg was
free from tuberculosis. She fin
ished her senior year of high
school, then joined her family in
Williamsburg in 1903. Her two
brothers attended William and
Mary, which only admitted male
students at the time.
O’Keeffe attended the Art
Institute of Chicago in 1905 but
left after a year. She returned to
Williamsburg, contracted
typhoid fever in 1906 and spent
most of the year at home, recov
ering.
She went to New York City in
1907 to study at the Art Students
League but was in Williamsburg
during half of 1908 because her
mother was sick. In 1909, the
family moved to Charlottesville.
O’Keeffe later moved to New
York and to a ranch in New
Mexico.
By the 1930s, O’Keeffe gen
erally was acknowledged as one
of the country's leading artists.
In recognition of her achieve
ments, William and Mary con
ferred upon her its first hon
orary degree in fine arts.
“It will be lovely to see the
Williamsburg country again
with the spring leaves,” O’Keeffe
wrote to the college president
on March 26, 1938. "I must
assure you that I never even
imagined ever going there or
any other place for an honorary
degree. It is quite outside my
usual way of thinking so it is very
much a surprise to me. A pleas
ant surprise.”
O’Keeffe died in 1986 at age
98.
The exhibition will remain at
the Muscarelle until May 27,
then travel to the Georgia
O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe.
Anniversary of'Catcher'to remain unpublicized
Inc ASSOCIATED PRESS
This year marks the 50th
anniversary of J.D. Salinger’s ’The
Catcher in the Rye.” But don’t
sxpect to hear that from his pub
isher.
A paperback edition just
released makes no reference to
the anniversary. There will be no
official readings, no panel discus
sions, not even a press release. You
will be lucky to get Little, Brown
and Co., a division of AOLlime
Warner Inc, to even mention it
The obvious, unstated reason
is Salinger himself. He cannot
bear to have others talk about
him.
“No comment,” said Terry
Adams, vice president and direc
tor of trade paperbacks for Little,
Brown, when asked why there
would be no publicity.
Adams has good reason to be
carefuL Not only is the 82-year-old
author famous for avoiding the
press, he has a history of stopping
others from discussing him:
In 1982, Salinger sued a man
who allegedly tried to sell a ficti
tious interview with die author to
a magazine. The man agreed to
desist
Five years later, another
Salinger legal action resulted in an
important decision by the U.S.
Supreme Court. The high court
refused to allow publication of Ian
Hamilton’s unauthorized biogra
phy of Salinger that quoted from
the author’s unpublished letters.
Salinger had copyrighted
them when he learned what the
book was to include.
In 1991, Brandeis University
announced Salinger had been
selected for one of nine arts
awards it was giving out. But then
Brandeis withdrew the award,
saying Salinger thought it focused
unwanted attention on him and
might lead people to think he
would show up for the ceremony.
Inl996, his agents pursued the
author of a Web site devoted to
Salinger, and it was taken down.
“I have no comment,” his
agent, Phyllis Westberg, said
Thursday when asked how, or
whether, Salinger would want the
anniversary of'' Catcher" to be
observed. "I don't answer ques
tions about him.”
'Sugar and Spice'
works as light fare
SPICE from page 5
Mellencamp’s ’80s hit song, this
is one of the most loving and
ignorant couples in movie histo
ry, mostly because of Jack’s
naivete. They are left without
any help from their families, and
are quickly falling into the
depths of poverty. To try to help
out, Diane gets a job at the local
supermarket bank, then decides
to rob it with the help of her best
pals.
Shelton plays a sweet, inno
cent dream queen who turns
into a conniving go-getter for
the sake of her to-be family.
Shelton has the talent of good
comic timing, and becomes the
character of a girl who loves
everything about high school
and will do anything for love.
Mena Suvari, from
“American Pie” and “American
Beauty,” plays a Kansas girl
grown from the cream of the
crop of dysfunctional families.
Though her part is rather small,
her involvement is significant
for the heist to be a success. Plus,
every movie needs a bad girl.
James Marsden, who plays
Jack, pops up a few times in the
movie, but is evidently better
talked about than heard from.
Marsden plays the village idiot
goof very well; so well, in fact,
that if he were in “Sugar & Spice”
any more than what was allot
ted, it would have been too
painful to watch.
Marla Sokoloff, who is best
known as the secretary on the TV
series “The Practice,” plays a
snotty jealous B-squad cheer
leader who is urging to get the
girls into trouble with the law
while earning a seat on the A
squad. She narratives the movie
from the beginning and is quite
fake as an actor. She tries too
hard, and the end result is a
weak performance.
Mandy Nelson’s writing of
childish hijinks, stupid humor
and ironic puns thrives the com
edy. The idea is simple and illog
ical: It is almost like a fairy tale of
trailer trash sorts.
It is a silly story, and the
viewer should know that going
into the theater. You can not
expect more than that The girls
have their cat-fights and make
up to be best friends again. They
are constantly wearing their
cheerleading uniforms and treat
their lives as if there are no true
dangerous consequences to
their actions. Hey, that is life in
MTV.
Stupid humor can go a long
way. The gas jokes, sex jokes and
poor, dirty people get the riot
laughs. There is nothing wrong
with that, especially since the
movie is about cheap shots that
will produce shallow humor.
“Sugar & Spice” is by no
means a great critical movie, but
it will make you laugh.
Amusement is what the film is
throwing out, so do not expect a
lot; it’s just for fun.
“Sugar & Spice.” Starring
Marley Shelton, Mena Survari,
James Marsden and Marla
Sokoloff. Directed by Francine
Me DougalL Rated PG-13 (adult
language and adult content).
Playing at the Plaza 4.
(402) 472-2588 $5.25/15 words
FAX: (402) 472-1761 $3.50/15 words (students)
dn@unl.edu $0.15 each additional word
$0.75 billing charge
$0.75/line headline
Deadline: 4 p.m. weekday prior
Classifieds
200s id
220 Furniture For Sale
Couch and love seat set good condition $50.
Sail 421-6433.
Futon $50. Walnut desk and credenza $300 obo.
421-6433.
240 Misc. For Sale
Snow Boards
Save big and go large. Snow boards and snow
board accessories on sale at 720 Snowboard
Shop. Products from Burton, Northwave, Vans.
25-50% off. 720 Snow board shop located at
Cycle works at 27 Vine. Close to Campus
475-2453.
Surplus City
Scooters, camoflauge, airsoft pistols,
much more. 3241 South 13th. 420-515
f*"8
and
Women’s 1/3 carat princess cut engagement
and wedding ring set, $800. Men's two-tone
wedding ring, $200 or both for $1000. Two 12
nch Rockford Fosgate subwoofers, $200. Sher
wood 2 by 50 ampmer, $100. (402)525-4337.
290 Vehicles For Sale
‘95 Prism 4 door, auto, $4850. ‘94 Centra, 4
door, auto, $3250. ‘89 626, 4 door/5 speed,
(1650. ‘88 Accord LXl 4 door, auto, $2650.
Saar's Auto 1647 South 3rd, 477-6442.
3/yv tsrvtess
350 Health and Fitness
Lose Weight
Cwi you afford to lose wetght7Yes! Inexpensive
guwanteed, risk-free. Ceil 1 -888-688-7967.
352 Income Tax
Experienced tax preparer with college student
special! Fast, reliable servioe. Call Vtalerie for de
tails. 464-7372.
365 Legal Services
Auto Accidents & DWI
Other criminal matters, call Sanford Pollack,
476-7474.
378 Pregnancy
Free
Pregnancy Test
Birthright is a confidential helping hand. Please
call for appointment or more information,
483-2609. Check out our website
www.birthright.otg.
40& Marias
400 Roommates
Female non-smoker roommate wanted ASAP.
Very nice, washer/dryer in unit, no lease. Cali
476-5148.
Female roommate needed for large 3 bedroom
home. 5 minutes from UNL, W/D. $400/month
(covers aM). 435-3215, leave message.
Female roommate wanted for 1/15 or 2/1.
Non-smoker, no pets. Washer/dryer, dishwasher
plus ail utilities paid. Located in quiet neighbor
hood. $40Q/month. Leave message at 438-3434
or 416-3263.
Female, share 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 27th and Old
Cheney. N/S. <290 plus utilities. Call 423-6362.
Looking for female roommate for 3 bedroom
apartment. $250/month + utilities. Close to UNL
325-6292. i
Male to share newer home in southeast Lincoln.
Many extras. 421 -0977 leave message.
Roomate needed male or female by February
1st. $190 rent and 1/4 phone and cable. Close
to campus. 477-8160.
Roommate needed for huge apartment 5 min
utes from campus, off-street parking, other
perks. $250/month 477-6665.
420 Rooms For Rent
Furnished home to share, private bedroom, 2
bath, intercultural household, cable TV, central
heat/AC, washer/dryer, fireplace, deck, large
yard, off-street parking, 1 block from #3 bus,
20th & South, utilities included. $275/month.
474-7729.
Room for rent in 3BR house. Includes phone,
cable, laundry, utilities. Five minutes from cam
pus, $300/month. 476-5580. Leave message.
430 Houses For Rent
4 bedroom, 2 bath, garage. 3443 T Street $750.
Available now. 450-5674 or 4303073.
2521 Sumner 5+1 Bedroom House for Rent,
$1200/month. Huge w/fireplace. Must come see,
560-4732 or leave message 475-0750.
Large 5 bedroom house. 2822 R street. 2 bath ,
central air, off-street parking, washer/dryer,
dishwasher. $950 + deposit. 560-9330.
440 Duplexes For Rent
4 bedroom, 2 bath. Garage. Washer/dryer hook
up. New duplex. 1758 N. 27th. $1000 per
month. Available now. 450-5674 or 4363073.
200 Hartley. 5 min. campus, 3 bedroom, 2.5
baths, finished basement, double garage,
W/D/DW/Frig. $950+deposit, available 3/1/01.
474-4674.
Minutes From Campus
4BR, 3 full baths, garage, deck, 2 family rooms,
washer/dryer, available. $1250.476-4905.
Walk to campus. Large remodeled 2 bedroom.
Central Air. Washer/drier. Off-street parking.
2410 Vine. $525-432-6476.
(402)465-8911
1955 G.1Bd.$345
2222 Orchard.1Bd.$345
501 North 251h.....2Bd.$395
306 North 32nd.2 Bd.$425
1502 David Dr......3 Bd.$650
450 Apartments For Rent
***Ck>80 to Ctty Campus***
1 & 2 bedroom, electric-entry, 20/G Street, $349
to $479.475-7262.
3 bedroom, 2+ garage, 1 bathroom and laundry
room only $750.2501 E Street 432-6476.
623 S. 19th Available - clean, affordable
142 bedroom apartments. Dishwasher, dis
posals, laundry facilities, off street parking.
Leasing specials now being offered. No
pets. ZIMMER APTS 402-423-4634.
3010 Center. Brand New. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, all
appliances, fireplace, double garage. $1075.
Available February, 2BR, $420, near haymarket.
A/C, D/W, pet ok, references. 474-4054, leave
AVAILABLE NOW!
1 or 2 bedrooms, all electric, FREE CABLE, no
pets/no smoking. $360 & $460.1900 Knox.
477-7684.
Clean 2 & 3 bedroom apartments. Newly re
modeled kitchen and bath. Rent $345 and $415
plus electric. For more information, call Pat or
Melody, (402)434-2610 or hearing Im
paired/TDO, (402)434-2613.
Furnished one bedroom near capital, 819 South
12th. Security building, washer/dryer, $260.
432-6476.
★1 BR Near Campus*
Appliances, dishwasher, mini-blinds, coin-op
laundry, off street parking, gas/heat/water trash
paid, cats ok, 3 or 6 month leases, super clean.
2504 Vine St.. 3 closets, $375
1109 N. 28th, outdoor pool, $375
1121 N. 28th, outdoor pool, $385
Cherry Hill Co. 402-489-4857
Newer, 3 bedroom, 240 S. 26th, double-slide
door balcony, built in microwave, off-street
parking. Leave message. 483-2357. $625.
Nice basement suite, 1 BR, Available now.
$330/month, plus 1/3 utilities. Close to East
Campus. 325-9643,__
Studio and 1 BR
Vintage-studio and 1 BR close to both campus
es, $300-$350.432-2288.
The Willows, 1800 Knox St., 1 & 2 bedroom,
available. Call 437-8322 for more detalils.
Two bedroom, close to UNL, fireplace. Available
November 15. For details contact 438-0777 or
466-8181.
♦ One Bedroom 2000 J St. Parking $310.
♦ One Bedroom 1507 S 19th. Roomy $335.
♦ 3 BR 5232 Cooper, w/d hookup, fire-place,
MB $730. No Smokers/Pets 440-3000.
We Offer
• 1,2 and 3 bedrooms
• Apt, Duplexes and Houses
• 24 Hour Maintenance call 438-0946
450 Apartments For Rent
<®> Century
We provide:
♦ Locations throughout Lincoln
♦ 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance
♦ Professional & Personable Leasing Staff
Call us today!
402-437-8300
500s
500 Help Wanted
$9-$12 Per Hour for
Delivery Drivers
Domino’s Pizza is now hiring for day and eve
ning shifts for delivery drivers and limited eve
ning inside help. No experience necessary. All
you need to start is a good driving record, relia
ble personal vehicle, liability insurance, and a
good attitude. Apply at any of the Domino’s lo
cations.
63rd & Havelock
Deli Clerks-PT
evenings/weekends
Fun job at great store! Minimum age 18, week
end availability required. We are an EOE offering
401k, profit sharing, Health/Dental ins., tuition
reimbursement, direct deposit, and much more.
Stop in and apply today, or contact Dave at
484-5804 for details.
A Great Way to Earn $30
TODAY!
Donate your blood plasma
(for approximately 2 hours)
Call or stop by: Nabi Biomedical Center, 300 S.
17th Street, Lincoln. 402-474-2335. Fees and
donation time may vary, www.nabi.com.
Arts & Sciences Undergraduate Students
Would you like to learn about your college and
help your fellow students in a fast-paced work
environment? The Arts & Sciences Advising
Center is looking for friendly, outgoing students
to be Advising Assistants. Applications available
in the A&S Advising Center, 107 Oldfather.
Deadline is Monday, January 29,2001.
Attention! Growing international company
$500-$5,000 PT/FT. Serious opportunity.
866-569-RICH.
Civil Engineers
Join a progressive, growth-oriented ENR Top
500 consulting engineering firm. We are seeking
individuals interested in water resources, trans
portation and municipal engineering. Responsi
bilities include assisting with design, project
management, surveying and field observation.
Experience with AutoCAD and Softdesk helpful.
Professional environment with an excellent com
pensation and benefits package. Please send
cover letter and resume to: Olsson Associates,
1111 Lincoln Mall, Lincoln, NE 68508. EOE.
500 Help Wanted
CellularONE
Hardt Communications, a leading CellularONE
Dealer, is looking for sales reps for multiple lo
cations. We need some daytime availability of
12:00 noon and also weekend availability.
Above average earnings. Talk to any of our sales
reps about how they like their jobs. Great
Mime job. Apply at our Nebraska Bookstore
i downtown at 13th & Q Street.
Comhusker Place Detox
Seeking individuals to work on-call as Addiction
Service Workers. Must be a team player and
have an interest in the human services field.
Must possess a current driver's license, have
excellent communication skills and the ability to
work with a diverse population. Apply in person
at 721 K Street or call Patti or Pam at 477-3951.
EOE.
CUSTOMER SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE
Cl Direct provides high-tech inbound customer
relationship management services to the insur
ance industry, and we need you as we growl
You must have a desire to help others, good
Windows PC skills, be able to type 25 WPM,
and have a great smile over the phone)
• $50.00 Hiring Bonus
• $7.5Q/hr after training
• FT, PT, days, evenings, weekends
• Extensive benefit program
• WAGE DIFFERENTIAL FOR SPANISH BILIN
GUAL AGENTS
• See www.cidirect.com for more info.
Apply in person between 8am and 5pm or send
or fax resume to:
5001 Central Park Drive
(One block south of 50th & R)
Lincoln, Nebraska 68504
FAX (402) 466-2171
EOE
ENGINEERING AIDE
Lincoln Electric System is looking for a junior or
senior majoring in Electrical Engineering with
power system emphasis. This position would be
part-time during the school year (approximately
20 hours a week that can be worked around
your class schedule) and 40 hours a week dur
ing the summer months. You would be working
with Engineers in our System Protection Depart
ment, gathering and recording data on electrical
failures, protective relaying databases, load
flows, and communication systems. Apply at
LINCOLN ELECTRIC SYSTEM
HUMAN RESOURCES DEPARTMENT
1040‘O’STREET
www.les.com
Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Engineering Technicians
Join a growing, Top 500 consulting engineering
firm located in downtown Lincoln. Positions in
clude: Student Technician to work with a group
involved in land development, utilities and pav
ing projects. Knowledge of AutoCAD helpful but
not required. Student Technician to work with a
group involved in designing flood control struc
tures, drainage structures, and storm sewer sys
tems. Responsibilities include computer-aided
drafting/design, construction observation and
surveying. Knowledge of AutoCAD or other
drafting software desired. Professional environ
ment, retirement plan and paid holidays. Please
send cover letter and resume to: Otsson Associ
ates, 1111 Lincoln Mall. Lincoln, NE 68508. EOE
500 Help Wanted
Pub
Part-time cook an?1cocktail waitress needed.
Experience preferred. Good pay, flexible hours.
Call 477-3513or stop by at11 &K.
1477-3513 or stop by
Excellent Staff Needed!
Flatwatar GrtK restaurant and Tbp of the Rock
banquets are taking on a new adventure and ex
panding our business! We need Day and Night
Servers (prefer Day) and line cooks (2 yrs. min.
experience) for Flatwater Grill, which was recent
ly named one of the best restaurants in Lincoln
by the Ground Zero. We also need Banquet
Staff for night and weekend hours; and
Full-Time/Part-Time Housemen for banquet
set-ups. Excellent pay and fun work environ
ment! Please stop in to Flatwater Grill at 14th
and P Streets to fill out an application TODAY!
LAST CHANCE!!!
Baseball Umpires Needed
Spring/Summer leagues, experience preferred,
great pay, flexible schedule. Free clinics start
next week. Call Jim at 325-9560 for info. Call
Today, spots limited.
Office Assistants
Successful, progressive engineering firm has
part-time openings available in our do1
part
Line
openings available in our downtown
ncoln office. Positions include: Accounting
Assistant responsible for data entry and filing
^...... i
for AP/AR, general financial administration i
other administrative duties. Experience with
word processing and spreadsheets helpful.
Marketing Assistant responsible for design and
layout of presentation materials, preparation of
marketing materials and company newsletter,
errands and other clerical duties. Graphic design
experience and scanning software helpful.These
positions are part-time during the school year
(15-25 hours a week) and full-time during the
summer optional. Professional environment,
flexible hours available, retirement plan and paid
holidays. Please send cover letter and resume
to: Olsson Associates, 1111 Lincoln Mall, Lin
coln, NE 68508. EOE.
VISIT US AT.,.*
dailyneb.com
Rent?
Pawnee • $69,500
One bedroom bungalow.
Completely Upadated. 1 Stall
Garage. All aplliances Included.
This one is a beauty!
Open this Sunday
January 28,2001
12:30-2:30
Owning a home can be easier
than you think.
Call me for information on
home ownership.
- Bruce Hahn
890-4246 A
434-3510 l£j